Star Spangled Magazine Covers, page 1

Every so often you'll find the stars'n'stripes theme in various forms in American
magazines: music mags, women's mags, photo mags, fashion mags, and
political mags. Americans love it. In these mags, there are also
abnormal frequency of the word America or American: American Fashion,
Sex in America, America's sweetheart; while hardly ever other country
or continent's name. For the average American, America = the world,
and that's how Americans like it, and the capitalistic consummeristic
America sells by it.

Does other country's magazines frequently cite their own country this or that? I think it's uniquely US phenomenon. Possibly UK in some degree too.

《Paper》 magazine, showing a pretty girl (Ivana Miličević?) clad in red-white striped sundress with a button-pin of peace-sign on flag. (notable is her runway chest. US magazines usually sport chesty women.)2001-09-11 issue of Rolling Stone, showing a US flag brooch. Brooch is just called pin in US, and is a American thing.Brat Britney Spears on Vogue.

Actress Lisa Marie (born 1968) on Gear.Jaime Bergman
(born 1975), Playboy's Playmate, January 1999, on the cover of Gear magazine, semi-baring her breast in a tattered shirt of US Flag imprint.Sex in the City queen Sarah Jessica Parker (born 1965).Fitness model Torrie Wilson (born 1975) on a wrestling magazine. “Made in America!” Her beautiful bare butt makes friend with a US flag. Note that care has been taken so that she doesn't actually sit on it.Christian war monger George W Bush versus presidential candidate John Kerry on Time magazine, 2004-10-18, cover illustration by Daniel Adel.
840×1120Pop songstress Jessica Simpson (born 1980) on GQ magazine, 2005-07.
414×469
Note the tag line: GOD, THIS IS A GREAT COUNTRY and “Jessica Simpson and 75 Other Reasons To Love America”.Bruce Springsteen on Rolling Stone. The date of this cover may be one of 1985-10-10, 1986-02-27, 1987-02-26. See also Born in the USA lyrics.Hustler magazine cover, 2002-07.